Slovakia moves to ban mRNA vaccines, arrest Big Pharma executives

The Slovakian prime minister may be the first Western leader to crack down on mRNA.

Slovakia, a small country in Central Europe, may soon ban mRNA vaccines, as well as prosecute those responsible for developing them and pushing them on the population.

This comes after a report published by Peter Kotlar, a Slovak government official tasked with reviewing resource management during the Covid-19 pandemic.

In the report, Kotlar recommended “stopping inoculation with mRNA vaccines until it’s proven they are safe.”

Kotlar also claimed that mRNA vaccines alter human DNA, were inadequately tested, and are overall dangerous.

The report was praised by the country’s president, Robert Fico, who coincidentally survived an assassination attempt earlier in the year.

You all know that I personally have always been against experimental vaccines against Covid-19.”

mRNA vaccines have been linked to numerous deaths in countries all over the world, including England and Canada.

However, they are still considered “safe and effective” by health authorities worldwide, including in Canada.

Prime minister Fico hinted that there could be criminal prosecutions on the horizon, as he instructed Kotlar to find out who in Slovakia had made exceptional profits from the “unnecessary purchase of medical supplies and vaccines.”

British Columbia premier hopeful John Rustad suggested he would hold Nuremberg-style trials for those responsible for pandemic-era crimes. He has since walked back those remarks.

Prime Minister hopeful Pierre Poilievre stopped short of calling for a total ban on mRNA vaccines, however he states that he will never mandate vaccines on a federal level if elected and will always give Canadians their choice.

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